In the early 13th century, a novel concept of religious community overran the occidental world: the Dominican Order. Unlike earlier religious orders who confined monks to the purview of praying the liturgy and living a life of contemplative seclusion, the Dominicans, by means of preaching, focused on engaging with the broad community beyond the convent walls. The result was a hitherto unseen interpenetration of a religious order into the intellectual as well as cultural realities surrounding it. The Dominicans soon became a driving force in medieval culture and their influence can be found in the practical, intellectual, and material aspects of European culture, from art to philosophy, from politics to the economy. The articles collected in this volume investigate the complex interdepencies of Dominican culture and Dominican theology from a plurality of scholarly perspectives throughout the Late Middle Ages and into Early Modernity.
Contributions by: Samuel Baudinette, Jan Henryk de Boer, Anja Bork, Marcel Bubert, Amalia Cerrito, Christian Etheridge, Alberto Ferreiro, Paul D. Hellmeier, Kristin Hoefener, Isabel Iribarren, Johnny Grandjean Gøgsig Jakobsen, Volker Leppin, J. Cornelia Linde, Constant J. Mews, Cheryl Midson, Marika Räsänen, Jonathan Reinert, Kirsten Schut, Ulrike Treusch, Christian Troelsgård, Marco Vorcelli, Carol J. Williams, Florian Wöller, Ueli Zahnd, and Andreas Zecherle
Über den Autor
Florian Wöller, Dr. theol. (University of Basel), 2015–2016 Lecturer in Ecclesiastical History (University of Basel), 2016–2018 Lecturer in Ecclesiastical History (LMU Munich), since 2018 Associate Professor in Ecclesial History (University of Copenhagen)
Ueli Zahnd, Dr. phil. (University of Freiburg, Germany) – 2014–2017 Assistant Professor in History of Philosophy (University of Basel) – 2017–2019 Professor in Ecclesiastical History (University of Basel) – since 2019 Professor at the Institut d'histoire de la Réformation (University of Geneva)